KATHRYN R. ASHWORTH (B.A., Brigham Young U)
has completed one book of poetry, To Live in a House, and is working on another, When the
Angel Comes from the Right. Her work has appeared in BYU Studies, Dialogue, Ensign, Gila
Review, Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature, BYU Today, and Sunstone.

KRISTI DUDLESTON, a senior at Weber State
College, is majoring in Visual Communications/Design. Her cover design was selected over
several submitted by advanced graphic design students.

ANNIE FINCH (M.A., U of Houston), a doctoral
candidate at Stanford University, is poetry editor of Sequoia. Her poems and critical
essays have appeared in South Dakota Review, Kansas Quarterly, PMLA, Cumberland Poetry
Review, and Legacy.

MILES E. FRIEND (Ph.D., U of Georgia) is an
Associate Professor of Art His-tory and Theory at Idaho State University. His book reviews
and articles have appeared in The Journal of Aesthetic Education and The Southeastern
College Conference Journal.

ALLAN JOHNSTON (Ph.D., U of California_Davis)
is a Lecturer in English at UC_Davis. His poetry has appeared in South Florida Poetry
Review, Asylum, Green Fuse, Redstart, The MacGuffin, California Quarterly, and Shooting
Star Review.

WILLIAM KLOEFKORN (M.S., Emporia State U)
teaches in the English Department at Nebraska Wesleyan University in Lincoln. His poetry
recently appeared in Georgia Review, Laurel Review, and Zone 3. Poetry collections include
Not Such a Bad Place to Be, Alvin Turner As Farmer, A Life Like Mine, Houses and Beyond,
and his newest, Drinking the Tin Cup Dry, will be published by White Pine Press, Fredonia,
New York.

VICTOR LUFTIG (Ph.D., Stanford U) is an
Assistant Professor in the Department of English at Yale University. His work sppears in
Virginia Woolf Miscellany, The Byron Journal, and James Joyce Quarterly.

PHILIP F. NOTARIANNI (Ph.D., U of Utah) is
the coordinator of the museum program at the Utah State Historical Society. He spent the
1987-88 academic year on a Fulbright Research Grant in Italy. His work has appeared in The
Family and Community Life of Italian Americans and Utah Folklife Newsletter. He has edited
Carbon County: Eastern Utah's Industrialized Island (1981) and Faith, Hope, and
Prosperity: The Tintic Mining District (1982).

ADEN ROSS (Ph.D., U of Utah), playwright and
poet, is a Lecturer in Humanities and Honors at Westminster College, Salt Lake City. Her
poetry has appeared in Poetry Northwest, Pembroke Magazine, Kansas Quarterly, and The
Centennial Review. Seven of her plays have been produced in Utah, Louisiana, and
off-Broadway.

RICH SCHWEITZER (M.A., Georgetown U) served
as a legislative intern in the U.S. House of Representatives in 1988 and is currently
researching a book-length manuscript on religion and World War I.

SUKHBIR SINGH (Ph.D., U of Hyderabad) is
currently a Lecturer in the English Department, Osmania University, Hyderabad, India. He
has been published in several Indian and American journals, including Indian Journal of
American Studies, Notes on Contemporary Literature, Panjab University Research Bulletin,
and The Madras Review of English Studies.

STEVEN F. WALKER (Ph.D., Harvard U) is an
Associate Professor of Comparative Literature at Rutgers University. His latest
publications include A Cure for Love: A Generic Study of the Pastoral Idyll (1987) and
"Vivekananda and American Occultism" in The Occult in America: New Historical
Perspectives, edited by Kerr and Crow.

GENE WASHINGTON (Ph.D., U of Missouri) is a
Professor of English at Utah State University. His articles have appeared in CCC, English
Journal, Technical Writing Teacher, Swift Studies, and Acta Victoriana. His short stories
have been featured in New Mexico Humanities Review, Big Two-Hearted, and Nexus.

MARK WOLLAEGER (Ph.D., Yale U) is an
Assistant Professor in the Department of English at Yale University. His work appears in
Milton's Studies and James Joyce Quarterly. He is currently under contract to Stanford
University for a forthcoming book titled Joseph Conrad and the Fictions of Skepticism.